Matthew. Please turn to slide five. We are very pleased with the strong finish to 2025. The team stayed focused and delivered consistently throughout the year. Delivering record revenue, EBITDA, and earnings per share for the fourth quarter and the full year. Demand remains positive. With our backlog finishing at $4.6 billion. Our book to bill was near one, both in the quarter and for the full year. Orders were healthy, up 7% in the quarter. Driven by over 20% growth in MCS. And for the year, orders were up 2%. Revenue grew 4% in the quarter, despite a challenging comparison of 7% growth in the same period last year. Full year revenue growth was solid at 5%. Full year EBITDA margin expanded 160 basis points to 22.2% driven by the same factors. The team's operational discipline delivered quarterly EBITDA margin of 23.2%. Up 220 basis points versus the prior year. The improvement was driven by productivity and price, more than offsetting inflation. Full year EBITDA margin expanded 160 basis points to 22.2% driven by the same factors. We also achieved a record quarterly EPS of $1.42, a 20% increase over the prior year. Our balance sheet remains in great shape. With net debt to adjusted EBITDA of 0.2 times. Year-to-date free cash flow decreased by 2% from the prior year, in line with expectations driven by outsourced water projects, system investments, and restructuring costs offset by higher net income. Let's turn to slide six. In measurement and control solutions, we can to convert the backlog with MCS' backlog finishing the year roughly $1.4 billion. Orders were up a robust 22% driven by smart metering demand across water and energy. However, this was below our expectations with several projects pushing out into 2026. Revenue was up 10%. Driven by energy metering demand, but supported by high single-digit gains in water as well. Which offset softness in analytics, related to timing effects caused by the government shutdown. EBITDA margin of 20.2% was 310 basis points higher than prior year. Driven by productivity, price, and volume more than offsetting mix and inflation. In water infrastructure, orders were down 1% in the quarter, with softness in treatment primarily in China mostly offset by strong demand in transport. Revenue was flat, with strong double-digit growth in The US, offset by an almost 30% decline in China. EBITDA margin for water infrastructure was up a remarkable 510 basis points driven by productivity, price, and mix, offset by inflation, volume, and investments. In applied water, orders were up 5% and book to bill was roughly one. Lifted by large projects and data center wins in The US. Revenues were up 3% versus the prior year. Primarily driven by strength in US commercial buildings. Segment EBITDA margin increased 60 basis points year over year. Driven by productivity and price, offset by inflation, volume, and mix. With some of these items being nonrecurring in nature, we expect Applied Water to be back in the 20% EBITDA range in the first quarter. Finally, water solutions and services saw robust demand orders increasing 7% driven by strength in services. Revenue growth was strong, up 4% against a tough comp. With strength in capital and services. Segment EBITDA margin was 23.9%, up 110 basis points versus the prior year driven by price, volume, and productivity, offset by inflation and mix. Now let's turn to slide seven for our 2026 segment outlook. Heading into 2026, our markets remain positive, and our teams are delivering on our commitment to simplify Xylem. Focus on our customers, and drive profitable growth. We are providing full year organic revenue outlook for the segments. And want to highlight that we are accelerating our 8020 efforts around product and customer simplification. As a result, we will have an outsized headwind to our top line for the year of roughly 2% doubling the impact we experienced in 2025. We expect this as a one-year elevation we are still committed to delivering on our long-term framework. In MCS, we expect growth in the mid-single digits. Overall demand is positive, and our pipeline remains strong. But project timing has been more variable and less predictable than we have experienced over the last few years. Our expectation is energy meters will drive a majority of the growth in 2026. And water meters will grow low single digits as expected orders from the fourth quarter pushed out into the '26. We will also have an impact from our eighty twenty actions. Primarily in analytics, impacting overall segment growth for the year. The first quarter will be challenged, down low single digits. We expect to see sequential revenue improvement throughout the year. As project kickoffs accelerate in the back half of the year. Also, as a reminder, we expect to close on the divestiture of the international metering business at the end of the first quarter. In water infrastructure, we expect low single-digit growth. We anticipate resilient OpEx and CapEx demand due to the mission-critical nature of our applications. With healthy utility end markets across most regions. However, will see headwinds from eighty twenty actions as we accelerate the simplification of our offerings and expect continued weakness in China's utility market. Primarily impacting the first half of the year. In applied water, we expect growth in the low single digits. We see growth across developed markets, particularly in The US, with large projects coming online and strong growth in data centers. Similar to the story in water infrastructure, growth will be offset in applied water by eighty twenty actions, exiting unprofitable business, and a weak China market impacting the first half of the year. WSS will deliver mid-single-digit growth driven by strength in outsourced water project, and solid demand in dewatering. Though we expect this will continue to be a more variable segment quarter to quarter, due to the project nature of our capital offerings. The segment is supported by a $1.4 billion backlog in strong funnel across all businesses. Now let's turn to slide eight for our full year and Q1 guidance for 2026. The growth outlook by segment translates into 2026 full year revenue of $9.1 billion to $9.2 billion resulting in revenue growth of one to 3% organic revenue growth of two to 4%. Again, this is on the low end of our long-term framework, through the eighty twenty actions we are taking across our segments. By continuing to increase the quality of our earnings and simplifying our business, to outperform our markets for the long term. 23.3%. EBITDA margin is expected to be 22.9 to This represents 70 to 110 basis points of expansion versus the prior year driven by productivity, volume, and price offsetting inflation. With productivity continuing to benefit from our simplification efforts, This yields an EPS range of $5.35 to $5.60. Up 8% at the midpoint over the prior year. As a reminder, we are committed to low double-digit free cash flow margin in our long-term financial framework. And we'll make additional progress in 2026. Drilling down on the first quarter, we anticipate reported revenue growth will be in the 1% to 2% range on a reported basis and flat organically. We expect first quarter EBITDA margin to be approximately 20.5% to 21%. Up 25 basis points at the midpoint. Driven by productivity gains and impacts from our simplification efforts offset by mix. This yields first quarter EPS of $1.06 to $1.11. We are entering the year with momentum and in a position of strength. Our balanced outlook reflects strong commercial positioning, the durability of our portfolio, and further benefits from simplification. Though we are monitoring broader market conditions and volatility, including tariffs, Overall, our expectations for the year remain positive as we build on our strong results. With that, please turn to slide nine, and I'll turn the call back over to Matthew for closing comments.